NGT slams Centre over groundwater extraction, says exemptions against sustainable development

Update: 2020-07-20 17:41 GMT

New Delhi: The National Green Tribunal Monday slammed the Centre over its submission that restriction on extraction of groundwater in over-exploited, critical and semi-critical (OCS) areas is likely to have an adverse impact on industrial production, employment opportunities and GDP of some States.

The green panel refused to review its order disallowing grant of 'No Objection Certificate' to industries in OCS areas and said exemptions for infrastructure projects, Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises or other industries or commercial purposes except drinking water will be against sustainable development and public trust doctrine.

The tribunal directed the Ministry of Jal Shakti and the Central Ground Water Authority to ensure that no general permission be given for the withdrawal of groundwater, particularly to any commercial entity, without carrying out an environmental impact assessment.

"There has to be listing of priorities within available limited resources and unlimited demands and impact assessment of such activity and policy of permitting extraction has to be based on carrying capacity in the form of the water levels.

"There must be no general permission for withdrawal of groundwater, particularly to any commercial entity, without environmental impact assessment of such activity on individual Assessment units in cumulative terms covering carrying capacity aspects by an expert committee," a bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice A K Goel said.

The green panel said that such permission to industries should as per Water Management Plans to be prepared in terms of this order based on mapping of individual assessment units.

"Any permission should be for specified times and for the specified quantity of water and not in perpetuity, and be necessarily subject to digital flow meters which cannot be accessed by proponents, with mandatory annual calibration by authorized agency at proponents' cost," the bench

said.

It said that an annual review by independent and expert evaluation must audit and record groundwater levels as well as compliance with the conditions of the permission.

"Such audits must be published online for transparency and to track compliance and year-on-year change in groundwater levels, and swift action taken against those who fail the audit, including withdrawal of permission, blacklisting, initiation of prosecution and recovery of deterrent compensation as per Central Pollution Control Board regime," the bench said.

The tribunal pulled the ministry over its plea to allow industries in as per old guidelines and said that mandate of law is sustainable development and only economic consideration is not enough for a policy, if it results in damage to the environment in violation of intra and intergenerational equity and the precautionary principle.

It said that no road map has been provided on how the new regime will check and neutralise falling groundwater

levels.

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